If I were mayor, Houston planning and opportunity, complete streets downside, Buffalo Bayou history, and more

Some smaller misc items this week after an event announcement: a new preservation group called “Pier and Beam” is launching with a happy hour this Wed evening (11/20) at Mongoose vs. Cobra. If you’re interested you can read more at the invite here and register here. Hat tip to Dave.

Q: After 33 years studying it, do you believe Houston’s lack of zoning hurts or helps the city?

A: It’s kept Houston’s marketplace moving, and I think it puts us at an advantage over other cities. I’m not your typical planner. I have seen a warehouse piece of property become a single-family development in just a matter of a year, year and a half. You go to another, zoned city and that takes years to get through the approval processes. The lack of zoning gives us a lot of flexibility as a city to reinvent ourselves fairly quickly, and it allows us the ability to amend our rules fairly quickly to respond to problems. It’s part of the energy, part of that can-do spirit that’s in Houston.

KUHF asked respondents to finish this statement: “Please tell us what you would do if your were the mayor of Houston, using the sentence as a springboard: If I was the mayor, I would …” My three answers around the Ike Dike, city branding, and METRO are near the bottom here.

“Our little squabble illustrates the tactics you can expect to see when the bike wars reach you. Cyclist-commuters may number no more than 2% of the adult American population according to a 2002 report by The Pedestrian and Bicycle Information Center, but they are the ones who go to city council meetings. They’ll push for the kind of “Complete Streets” policy that our city adopted, one that gives priority to pedestrians and cyclists over cars.

In the abstract, that will sound innocuous, but when the time for implementation arrives, you’ll find yourself losing your street parking, street by street, as roads are repaved.”

For Ting, Houston still promises “the idea of ‘if you work hard, you’ll reap the benefits.'” …

He seriously thought about moving to Austin, given its young population, but to him, “the city just feels like a college town.” Next to Austin’s revelry, Houston is the mature, moneyed older brother: “It has the resources and the population I’m going after.”

Speaking of opportunity, there are fresh links to the Opportunity Urbanism report Joel Kotkin and I created at the GHP web site here (scroll down under Independent Research), including my policy framework. Hat tip and thanks to Patrick.